The present invention refers to a method to sense the breathing of a man or an animal, a breathing sensor adapted to perform the method and a device to sense the breathing of a human or an animal.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe expression "to sense the breathing" in this document is referred primarily to achieve a signal which to a substantial extent follows the breathing air flow.
In many different situations there may be a reason to sense the breathing of a man or an animal. Various states of illness, intensive care, examinations of performances and breathing supervision during sleep are examples of such occasions when one wishes to measure the breathing rate and an eventual disruption of the breathing or study a wave shape corresponding to the breathing.
Many different methods have been tried to sense the breathing. Examples of such are those which are based on pressure changes in the breathing air flow that for example may influence a membrane, the curve of which is sensed by a strain gauge transducer or by another method. Another method is to let a thermistor be cooled by the breathing air flow and to sense the voltage level across the same, and an additional method is to sense the movement of a ball in the air flow.
An object of the present invention is to achieve a method and a device to sense the breathing and a breathing sensor of a new, simple and reliable type which can be utilized in a flexible way when there is desire to sense the breathing. An object is also to achieve breathing sensors which easily can be carried by a patient and which do not need to incorporate electric cables at the proximity of the body. An additional object is to achieve breathing sensors which are easy to keep clean and when needed sterile and which are so cheap that if desired they can be utilized as disposable products. Further objects and purposes appear in greater detail in connection with the following specification.
The method and the device to sense the breathing and the breathing sensor according to the present invention is based on the fact that the humidity of the breathing air varies strongly between in- and exhalation. At inhalation the relative humidity in the breathing air flow at the nose or the mouth approximately is the same as that of the ambient air, i.e. frequently far below 100% while at exhalation it is basically saturated with water vapour, i.e. 100% relative humidity.
If one allows the breathing air to pass a surface that is colder than 37° C. water will condense on the surface when expiration air passes. Mist is formed on the surface. If, for example, said surface constitutes the end of an optical fibre, the condensation course can be studied in the following way. Light or other electromagnetic beam is guided into the optical fibre which beam in turn can be guided by means of an optical fibre from a source which can be a laser, laser diode, light emitting diode or some other light bulb. The optical beam that reaches at the far end of the fibre partly will be reflected and partly leak out. If the end of the fibre becomes coated by mist tis relation will be changed so that a smaller part of the ray will be reflected back when the fibre is moist than when it is dry. The reason for this is that the small drops of water constituting the mist form small lenses which let out radiation in more angles than what is the case of the dry fibre. The breathing then can be sensed as intensity variations of the reflected light by any appropriate method which is exemplified below.
It is also possible to detect the intensity variations of the beam that is transmitted in order to sense the breathing from this variation. This can for example be carried out by means of a photo detector or another fibre end which captures a part of the transmitted radiation at the proximity of the first end of the fibre. It is also possible to use the principle according to the present invention in another way. For example a loop of an optical fibre can be utilized, where the sensor surface is constituted by a window of arbitrary form which lets out a part of the radiation guided in the fibre but guides the remainder further to the other end of the fibre. In the same manner as in the basic design the moisture on the window influences the intensity of the beam that is emitted through the window and thereby also the beam that is guided further in the fibre.
It is also possible to use the principle according to the invention without any optical conductor or fibre being used. If a wholly or partly reflective or transmitting element is placed in the breathing stream and exposed to an optical signal the transmitted or the reflected signal can be sensed and the breathing be determined from its variations. The optical signal can be directed directly against the reflective or transmitting element and the sensor likewise, or else either the source of the optical signal or the sensor or both may include reflective or transmitting elements which constitute a sensor surface.
Experiments which have been carried out with a reflected beam from a plastic optical fibre end, show that the intensity of the beam varies in good accordance with the breathing air flow and that no particular actions need to be carried out in order to lead off heat from the fibre end.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThe invention now will be described in closer detail in connection to the drawing, in which
FIG. 1 diagrammatically shows a device according to the invention
FIGS. 2 and 3 show different embodiments of breathing sensors according to the invention,
FIG. 4 shows an example of a circuit diagram which can be utilized at devices according to the invention,
FIGS. 5 and 6 show further embodiments of breathing sensors according to the invention, and
FIG. 7 shows a holder for an optical fibre and an oxygen catheter.
PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTIONIn the embodiment of the invention according to FIG. 1 alaser drive circuit 1 is coupled to alaser diode 2, the optical signal of which is conducted via a firstoptical conductor 4, a fibre coupler 3 and a secondoptical conductor 5 to the proximity of a breathing path of a person 7 who constitutes a measuring object. The fibre coupler 3 is such that the optical signal from theconductor 4 in the main is conducted further to theconductor 5 while the output signal on the thirdoptical conductor 6 primarily originates from the optical signal which is conducted in the fibre coupler 3 from the otheroptical conductor 5 and which in the present case originates from the part of the signal from thelaser diode 2 that is reflected by the end of the secondoptical fibre 5 where the very sensor surface is situated. The fibre coupler 3 can include the first (4) and the third (6) fibre being joined edge to edge with thesecond fibre 5, the diameter of which is twice the size of the rest.
From thethird fire 6 the optical signal goes to aphoto detector 8. The electric output signal which is generated by the light falling on the photo detector consists of two parts. A DC-level which only depends on the characteristics of the beam source, of the fibre and of the photo detector and a voltage variation superimposed on this which depends on how large a portion of the incident beam which, due to the mist on the sensor surface by the fibre end, is coupled out from the fibre at the measuring object. The superimposed voltage level has the character of a sinusoidal wave.
The breathing depending output signal from thephoto detector 8 can be used and processed in various ways. What is illustrated in FIG. 1 is adetector circuit 9, which is intended to convert the signal of the photo detector to square wave pulses in time to the breathing. These are converted in the time-to-frequency converter 10 to the breathing frequency which is shown on adisplay 11.
FIG. 2 shows a preferred embodiment of a breathing sensor according to the invention. Theend surface 51 of theoptical conductor 5 forms a sensor surface that normally lets out a part of the supplied optical signal and reflects a part, whereby the relationship between transmission and reflection is influenced by the condensation rate of thesensor surface 51 initiated by theair flow 71 of the breathing. Thesignal 52 in theoptical conductor 5 consequently includes a supplied signal and a reflected signal. The end of theoptical conductor 5 with thesensor surface 51 is surrounded by mainly atubular holder 20 intended to keep theconductor 5 and thesensor surface 51 on site in the breathing air flow in for example a nostril. Theoptical conductor 5 can be constituted by a commercially available optical fibre of plastic. Thesensor surface 51 preferably should lie mainly in parallel to the air flow.
A variant of the breathing sensor appears in FIG. 3. Thesensor surface 53 here instead constitutes a portion of an optical conductor on which the cladding layer of the conductor has been removed, and the conductor here instead constitutes a loop so that part of the beam supplied which does not leave the conductor at thesensor surface 53 is conducted further to a receiver. With this sensor no fibre coupler 3 or the like is required but oneend 4 may receive the suppliedbeam 41 while theother end 6 emits anoutput signal 61 which can pass directly to aphoto detector 8.
FIGS. 5 and 6 shows two alternate designs of the breathing sensors operating according to the same principle as that of FIG. 2. Both are built up from essentially tube shapedholders 20a and 20b respectively with a substantially ball shaped end intended to be inserted into the nose and possibly one or more external grooves, and contains amain channel 21 for the breathing stream. In the embodiment according to FIG. 5 theoptical fibre 5 is fixed coaxially with themain channel 21 so that thesensor surface 51 is directed towards the breathing stream. A number ofsmaller holes 22 are arranged about the attachment for theoptical fibre 5, so that the breathing stream can flow through themain channel 21, past thesensor surface 51 and through theholes 22. At a preferred embodiment themain channel 21 has a diameter reaching to about 8 mm which ends in fiveholes 22 of about 3.5 mm in diameter. Agroove 23 for an oxygen catheter may be provided in theholder 20a, and an oxygen catheter may be guided together with theoptical fibre 5 from the patient.Holder elements 25 or 25a according to FIG. 7, which have openings and channels adapted to retain the optical fibre and the oxygen catheter respectively, can be utilized for this purpose. At the second embodiment according to FIG. 6 themain channel 21 is passing through and theoptical fibre 5 is provided radially in the main channel so that the breathing stream sweeps past and mainly parallel to thesensor surface 51. It is also possible to provide thefibre 5 and thesensor surface 51 in other angles with respect to the breathing stream than those appearing in the embodiments shown. Theholders 20a and 20b are preferably made in plastic material, for example polyethene and thefibre 5 can be held on site in the holder by the fibre with its envelope being screwed into threadedholes 23 and 24 respectively in the holder.
As mentioned earlier even other designs of breathing sensor are conceivable and the patent protection should only be limited by the wording and equivalents of the patent claims. Within the scope of the inventive concept it is also possible for example to replace thetubular holder 20 with any other appropriate means for keeping the sensor surface in the breathing stream, such as a tape or the like or a holder designed otherwise. As an example thetubular holder 20 may be provided with a flap that facilitates tape fixation. Also, it is of course possible to provide sensors according to the invention in the breathing air flow to masks or tubes at respirators or other similar equipment.
A special application in which the invention can be of great value is the use in magnetic cameras. In these no metallic parts may be inserted and sick patients have to be monitored during relatively long examination times.
An embodiment of thedetector circuit 9 is shown in FIG. 4. This circuit has been designed to ensure the function of the breathing detector even by unsymmetrical and strongly disturbed breathing cycles. In addition to the main circuit for detection of the breathing signal FIG. 4 contains a ±5volts converter circuit 91 and adrive circuit 1 for the laser diode D1.
The signal received by the photo transistor T1 (corresponding to designation no. 8 in FIG. 1) is brought to alow pass filter 94 with thecutoff frequency 5 Hz. The filtered signal is coupled to a peak-detector 95 built up of two operational amplifiers. In adifferential amplifier 96 the difference is then formed between the signal son the peak-detector in- and outputs. At the output thereof now is found the upper peak value of the signal as a base line and the signal, amplified about 100 times, located on top of this line. The amplifier stage is followed by a pulse shaper consisting of two successive NAND-gates (IC 11). From the first NAND-gate amonostable multivibrator MV 1 is triggered with the pulse length of 6 seconds. This mono flip-flop only triggers on positive (=ascendant) pulse flanks. Next NAND-gate is coupled via a derivating net to the reset input of the mono flip-flop. The result will be that the 6-second pulse of the mono flip-flop is interrupted when the signal goes down which occurs by exhalation. If however, the expiration signal fails because of interference, or arrives too late, the time of 6 seconds will run out and the mono flip-flop resets. After the mono flip-flop MV 1 an additional mono flip-flop MV 2 of the pulse length 0.1 seconds follows, the mission of which is to reset the peak-detector 95 via twofield effect transistors 97 so that a new inhalation phase can be started.
The output signal from the circuit is constituted by 0.1 second long pulses of time intervals that constitutes a measure of the breathing rate. The output signal can be connected to a frequency counter for conversion to a breathing rate after an appropriate number of pulses according to conventional technique. It can also be used directly to control an acoustic signal or presented on a display, which also can be done with the analogue breathing signal, which in that case suitably is extracted after thedifferential amplifier 96.
The circuit according to FIG. 4 is adapted to a detector according to FIG. 2, in which reflected light from the sensor surface is detected. If instead transmitted light from the sensor according to FIG. 3 is detected, the same circuit can be used on condition that the signal is inverted.
______________________________________ Component list to FIG. 4. Des. Type/Value ______________________________________ IC11 4093 IC12 IR 3C02 IC13 TLC 274 IC14 4538 IC15 7660 T1 TEYT5500 T2,T3 2N3820 R7 22 Ω R8 1.5 kΩR9 5 kΩ R10 2.7 kΩ/20°C. R11 20 kΩR12 1 MΩ R13 10 kΩ R14, R15 1 kΩ R16, R17, R19 100 kΩ R18 1.2 MΩ R20 4.7 kΩ R21 27 kΩ R23 10 kΩ R22, R24, R25 100 kΩC6 22 μF C7 0.47 μF C8, C9 100 nF C10 4.7μF C11 1 μF C12 0.68 μF C13 0.33 μF C14, C15,C16 10 μF L1 47 μM D1 LT022MC D2, D3, D4 1N4148 D5 1N4004 ______________________________________